Owner Ryan Eller enjoys a beer in front of his beer bottle collection, which contains bottles up to 40 years old.
Owner Ryan Eller enjoys a beer in front of his beer bottle collection, which contains bottles up to 40 years old.

My son, age 9, and I have a running joke. When his sister and mom make plans, leaving us guys on our own, and we discuss what weโ€™re going to do, the answer is always, โ€œget a pizza, drink some beer, guy stuff โ€ฆโ€ and other nonsense. Maybe itโ€™s not as funny written out here. We rarely actually do anything of the sortโ€”well, he doesnโ€™t, at least not the beerโ€”itโ€™s just fun pretending weโ€™re going to do the most stereotypical guy stuff possible.

As it turns out, actually doing that stuff is pretty great. I needed to console the sting of his sister attending her first concert with their favorite aunt, so we thought maybe shooting some pool and getting a pizza would make a good guysโ€™ night. Destination: Mellow Fellow of Reno (as opposed to the Truckee or Virginia City locationsโ€”the original Kings Beach site closed last year).

Tucked in the ground floor of a parking/office structure on East Second Street across from Greater Nevada Field, Mellow Fellow occupies the site of the former Silver Peak pizza joint, Slice of the Peak. I often wondered whether the busy baseball season would be enough to sustain business year-round on the lightly trafficked block. With more than just pizza and beer for baseball fans, Mellow Fellow appears to have a formula successful enough to carry them through the off months.

Walking up, Mellow Fellow appears divided, one side restaurant-style table seating and the other more traditional bar. The bar side also has several long tables for dining or communal drinking, a couple of cushy couches, and a pool table, delightfully free of charge. The division gave me pause as I wasnโ€™t sure if minors were limited to the dining side. After struggling to get the attention of a bartender, feeling invisible while hovering awkwardly behind other patrons, I finally focused my laser-like eye contact and confirmed it was fine for the boy to join me.

This is a temple to beer, from the wall of bottles to the barrel staves and barley stalks decorating the room. The draft selection is top notch, filling a giant chalkboard dominating the wall above the kitchen. With menu options roughly categorized by styles like lighter, darker and hoppy, it was easy to find things I likedโ€”but hard to decide. I settled on a new IPA from local Lead Dog, one of just a few local beers available. Besides the draft list, two glass-doored coolers held a beer geek buffet of bottles and cans, the best kind of window shopping for obsessive craft beer fans. This broad, top-shelf selection of beer is probably a factor in Mellow Fellowโ€™s success, hosting regular events like โ€œall you can drinkโ€ nights dedicated to a single craft breweryโ€™s beers.

The bar wasnโ€™t terribly crowded, but a mix of customers mostly filled the barโ€”eating, drinking, and generally making merry.

After half-assedly dominating the pool table, thenโ€”much to my sidekickโ€™s delightโ€”scratching on the eight ball, I offered the choice of eating there or proceeding with our pizza plan. While I could happily have stayed and ordered something from the attractive menu of modern gastropub food to go with a second beer, sadly, a $5 Hot-n-Ready was firmly in my sonโ€™s sights, and he would not be deterred.

Marc Tiar has lived in Reno for most of his life. He is a semi-retired librarian, a family man and an occasional freelance writer. While practicing his beer geekiness, he enjoys home brewing, beer judging,...

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